You know, the true answer to this question really is; how much do you WANT to 
spend?
 
Me, I got by on my original attempt with around $100... that was because I 
happened to have the components sitting around wasting space, so building out a 
PC to host Myth was just a matter of getting the capture card (in my case a 
PVR-250). Many geeks like me probably have a bits box full of parts that they 
could build a machine out of. My initial build was an AMD 800 with 768Mb RAM 
and a 60Gb hard drive. Even the case was an old Gateway Destination (remember 
those?) case that I happened to have picked up a few years back and never 
used... so it matched my stereo components rather nicely. OK, so the 
motherboard's not a perfect fit, but it's good enough (the back panel has no 
aluminum plate).
 
Once I'd built this out and tested it for a while... and once my wife had 
decided she really liked it I began to upgrade. I purchased a new mobo, memory 
and CPU... but ended up not using them because the new mobo fit but I didn't 
have a power supply with the Pentium 4 connector. Bummer... but just a stupid 
oversight on my part. At about the same time I had purchased two 160Gb drives, 
and I installed those in a mirrored set to replace the single 60... much better 
(I filled 60Gb in a disturbingly short amount of time). Since my upgrade budget 
was toast, no new PSU... but the mobo's still in storage for future development.
 
Cost of a total Myth setup will also depend on HOW you plan to set it up. 
Dedicated front and back ends will obviously cost more, but will provide almost 
unlimited expansion potential. Single-box front/backends will be cheaper, but 
you might find yourself hitting the upper limits of operability quickly. You 
pays your money and you takes your choice.
 
Personally, I've found recently that my PIII-700 laptop with 256MB of RAM will 
run a frontend quite happily with no impact on my AMD 800 backend/frontend box. 
I paid less than $250 for this on Ebay about a year ago... and it's nice to sit 
with my wireless card in and seclude myself in a relatively unused corner of 
the house and watch Battlestar Galactica while my kids watch TV in the family 
room.
 
So in summary... what do you feel like spending? What have you got you can use 
to build out a frontend? How motivated are you?

        -----Original Message----- 
        From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] on behalf of Tom Hines 
        Sent: Mon 1/23/2006 8:02 AM 
        To: Discussion about mythtv 
        Cc: 
        Subject: Re: [mythtv-users] Cost of MythTV Machines
        
        

        I assume the systems to which you are referring are HD capable and
        "just work".  My motive for building my own box was that I wanted to
        tinker with VIA min-itx mobos and it was just time for another DIY
        project.  I forget what the price breakdown was, but I'm in it for
        over $600 now.
        
        VIA EPIA M10000 (provides networking, video out, sound)
        Haupauge PVR-250
        120 GB Hard Drive
        DVD+RW (which I never use)
        Cheap noname micro-atx desktop case
        Quiet replacement fan for the power supply
        Wireless keyboard and mouse
        KnoppMyth
        
        I had fun building it, but I'm not sure if I will rebuild when I go
        for high def.  I'm not too happy with MythTV and might give Tivo a
        try.
        
        Tom
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